Poor-tasting pediatric medicines: Part 1. A scoping review of their impact on patient acceptability, medication adherence, and treatment outcomes.

Frontiers in drug delivery Pub Date : 2025-04-22 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.3389/fddev.2025.1553286
Sejal R Ranmal, Jennifer Walsh, Catherine Tuleu
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Abstract

Background: Many medicines for children taste bitter and unpleasant, presenting a significant barrier to effective pharmacotherapy. Anecdotally, this issue is widely recognized; however, empirical evidence on the consequences of unpalatable medicines remains scarce and fragmented. The objective of this scoping review was to investigate the impact of poor tasting pediatric medicines on patient acceptability, medication adherence, and/or treatment outcomes.

Methods: A literature search was performed in MEDLINE/PubMed, EMBASE and CINAHL from inception to June 2023. Eligibility criteria included interventional or observational studies conducted in children aged 0-18 years (population), administered an unpalatable oral medicine (exposure), with any reported impact on patient acceptability, medication adherence, and treatment effects (outcomes). Study screening and data extraction was completed using a standardized form on Covidence.

Results: After searching 2,282 citations and reviewing 429 full-text papers, 225 articles were included in the final analysis. The impact of poor-tasting medicines was observed across 77 diseases or indications, with 156 different unpalatable medicinal products identified. Outcomes were most frequently linked to reduced patient acceptability, with 64% of articles reporting rejection responses, the need for strategies to aid administration (from positive reinforcement to physical restraint and forced administration), and impacts on prescribing practices (e.g., use of non-first line alternative therapies). Medication adherence impacts were reported in 27% of the reviewed studies, where poor taste was reported as a barrier to adherence in chronic diseases and correlated with incomplete dose administration in acute conditions. A small number of studies linked palatability with treatment outcomes, including viral suppression in HIV and seizure control in epilepsy.

Conclusion: This review highlights the widespread adverse impact of poor-tasting pediatric medicines on patient experiences and outcomes, though the true extent of the issue may still be underreported. The problem affects children worldwide, across all age groups, and is frequently noted by parents, caregivers, and healthcare professionals in both clinical and domiciliary settings. These findings emphasize the need for the development and prescription of more palatable medicines for children, as well as the advancement of more universal taste-masking strategies to address this widespread problem.

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味道差的儿科药物:第1部分。对其对患者可接受性、药物依从性和治疗结果的影响进行范围审查。
背景:许多儿童用药尝起来苦味和不愉快,这是有效药物治疗的一个重大障碍。有趣的是,这个问题得到了广泛的认可;然而,关于令人不快的药物后果的经验证据仍然很少,而且支离破碎。本综述的目的是调查味道差的儿科药物对患者可接受性、药物依从性和/或治疗结果的影响。方法:检索MEDLINE/PubMed、EMBASE和CINAHL自成立至2023年6月的文献。资格标准包括在0-18岁儿童(人群)中进行的干预性或观察性研究,给予不可口的口服药物(暴露),对患者可接受性、药物依从性和治疗效果(结果)有任何报告的影响。使用关于covid - 19的标准化表格完成研究筛选和数据提取。结果:检索文献2282次,审阅全文论文429篇,最终纳入225篇。在77种疾病或适应症中观察到味道差的药物的影响,确定了156种不同的难吃药品。结果最常与患者可接受性降低有关,64%的文章报告了排斥反应、辅助给药策略的需要(从积极强化到身体约束和强制给药)以及对处方实践的影响(例如,使用非一线替代疗法)。在回顾的研究中,有27%的研究报告了药物依从性的影响,其中,不良味觉被报告为慢性疾病患者依从性的障碍,并与急性疾病患者给药不完全相关。少数研究将适口性与治疗结果联系起来,包括HIV病毒抑制和癫痫发作控制。结论:本综述强调了味道差的儿科药物对患者体验和结果的广泛不良影响,尽管问题的真实程度可能仍然被低估。这个问题影响着全世界所有年龄组的儿童,并且经常被临床和家庭环境中的父母、照料者和卫生保健专业人员注意到。这些发现强调了为儿童开发和处方更可口的药物的必要性,以及推进更普遍的掩盖味道策略来解决这一普遍问题的必要性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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